Zhizhiqi
Zhizhiqi, a Chinese idiom, means that people who have been away for a long time miss their parents. From the book of songs, Weifeng, Zhihu.
Notes on Idioms
Zhi: climbing and rising; Hu: mountains with vegetation; Qi: mountains without vegetation.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of songs, Wei Feng, Zhi Hu: "Zhi Hu Xi, looking at my father I'm looking forward to my mother. "
Idiom usage
I miss my parents. The second volume of Cheng dengji's the forest of learning from children: "a loving mother looks forward to her son, depending on her family and Lu; a wandering son thinks of his relatives, Zhiqi."
Zhizhiqi
make no social distinctions in teaching - yǒu jiào wú lèi
not attend to one 's proper works or duties - tōu gǒu xì jī
Simple words and abundant meanings - yán jiǎn yì fēng
as evident and obvious as the sun and the stars - zhāo rú rì xīng
allow private feelings to outweigh public duty - yǐ sī fèi gōng